Videos

Chicago Bulls: Is it time to move on from Patrick Williams?Josh De Lucaon October 24, 2022 at 2:44 pm

The 2022 NBA season has barely begun but have we already seen enough of Patrick Williams in a Chicago Bulls uniform? This is not going to be a popular statement for Bulls fans but before you make your judgment, hear me out first. What does he bring to the team?

The answer is not much. Three games into 2022, Williams averages 5.7 points, 2 rebounds, and 0 assists a game. At first glance, you would probably think that Williams hasn’t been playing many minutes this season. Through three games, he is averaging 23 minutes.

Williams has always been a solid defender for the Bulls but his woes on offense are starting to outweigh his defensive success.

With fantastic scoring options like DeMar DeRozan and Zach LaVine already in Chicago, Williams doesn’t need to get his own shot, he simply needs to be able to hit open shots and rebound the basketball for the Bulls.

However, Williams is shooting a horrifying 33% from the field and an even worse 25% from deep. His skill set simply doesn’t fit what the Bulls need from their role players.

Obviously, every team needs lengthy, athletic defenders on their roster to can pressure opposing teams into bad shots and turnovers. Williams can do this at times. But when you provide no value on the offensive end, you almost have to play fantastic defense to even stay in the rotation.

What could the Chicago Bulls get in return for Patrick Williams right now?

One positive you can take from this is that Patrick Williams is barely 21 years old. Yes, he still has time to develop parts of his game. Williams had a solid season for a 19-year-old rookie, averaging 9 points and 4 rebounds a game.

However, Williams then suffered a wrist injury that sidelined him for the majority of last season. When he returned, he didn’t take that second-year leap that many players do and statistically, wasn’t as good as his rookie season.

Now three games into the 2022 season, Williams looks even less comfortable and effective than he did previously. Granted, the Bulls have only played three games so far, but what we have seen so far is concerning.

If the Bulls were going to move on from Williams, right now would be the best time to. With Williams still being so young, there would probably be multiple teams interested in the young forward in hopes that he would still develop.

The return on Williams wouldn’t be mind-blowing but this Bulls team is built to win now and doesn’t have time to wait around for Williams to develop. With a lack of consistent three-point shooting outside of LaVine, a veteran who could stretch the floor would be a perfect target.

Ultimately, it’s going to be up to Marc Eversley and the rest of the Chicago Bulls front office but trading Williams now could be the difference for this win-now team.

Read More

Chicago Bulls: Is it time to move on from Patrick Williams?Josh De Lucaon October 24, 2022 at 2:44 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears face monumental task in beating Patriots at home

Bill Belichick is on the verge of surpassing Chicago Bears George Halas for second all time on the NFL head coaching win total list.

Belichick is on top of that list because he is so good against first and second-year quarterbacks at home.  Since 2003 Belichick has compiled a 42-3 record against young QBs.  Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields is likely to struggle mightily against the Patriots defense.  Belichick is one of the most consistent defensive masterminds in the league’s history.

He sees weaknesses on tape and attacks them and Fields has yet to develop the confidence in what he’s seeing to make plays.  It’s getting to the point with Justin Fields that he needs to start taking more risks as Chicago Bears QB in order to put the Bears in a position to win games.  On the season Justin Fields has only four touchdowns to 5 interceptions.  To say that Justin Fields has been conservative is an understatement, or maybe he’s just not seeing what needs to be seen to make plays.

The “Not So Good” Part Kurt Warner Breaks Down Justin Fields and the Bears Offensive Woes – YouTube

There is little doubt that the Chicago Bears have to play conservatively because of the massive pass-blocking failure that exists up front, but that changes this week with Lucas Patrick moving to center and Zach Schofield taking over at left guard.  The hope is Sam Mustipher was the biggest problem with pass protection, but that’s doubtful given how awful Patrick has been as well as tackles Braxton Jones and Larry Borom.  Mustipher finally being benched hopefully leads to Patrick taking over the protection calls and that leads to better pass blocking for Justin Fields.

The Chicago Bears need to establish the run game early and then hope it opens up the play-action pass game.  This is where Fields needs to be more aggressive.  He needs to take advantage of his accuracy down the field and cut it loose regardless of what he thinks he’s seeing and try to throw his receivers open instead of waiting for them to come open.

Fields’ failures right now are a familiar failure to Bears fans.  Jay Cutler was also one who could never develop the rhythm necessary to throw his receivers open.  No matter which offense Cutler was in, he could never throw with timing.  Fields is also struggling with the same issue which if this is a habit he can’t overcome may prevent him from reaching his full potential.

 

Read More

Chicago Bears face monumental task in beating Patriots at home Read More »

NBA first week surprises: the good (the Jazz!), the bad (the 76ers) and the ugly (sorry, Lakers fans)on October 24, 2022 at 12:55 pm

The first week of the 2022-23 NBA season did not disappoint, delivering big-time performances, upsets and playoff-caliber matchups.

Ja Morant and Paolo Banchero got off to strong starts as the Memphis Grizzlies star scored 49 points against the Houston Rockets on Friday night and the Orlando Magic player on Wednesday became the first rookie since LeBron James to debut with at least 25 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists — he had 27, 9 and 5 against the Detroit Pistons.

2 Related

The Boston Celtics and the Utah Jazz are both 3-0 after going through significant player personnel changes during the offseason. The Celtics are without suspended coach Ime Udoka and center Robert Williams III is still sidelined, and the Jazz traded stars Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert while also working under a first-year head coach in Will Hardy.

Two star-studded teams, the Philadelphia 76ers and the Los Angeles Lakers, emerged from Week 1 without a win.

Our NBA insiders reflect on the biggest moments, surprises and reactions thus far.

Whose start to the season has been the biggest surprise?

Kevin Pelton: Break up the Jazz? Supposedly tanking the season after trading their two stars, the Jazz began 3-0 with wins against three West contenders, including Rudy Gobert’s Minnesota Timberwolves. It’s only three games — and worth remembering the 2013-14 76ers started 3-0 and finished 19-63 — but it does feel like maybe Utah ought to see how good this group is before tearing it down in the name of landing top NBA prospect Victor Wembanyama.

Jamal Collier: John Wall looked like John Wall. It was hard to know what to expect from the newest LA Clipper after a year away, so it was awesome to see him come out with such fresh legs. It was one game, but this Wall looked like what the Clippers needed off the bench and at point guard.

Tim MacMahon: The Utah Jazz — fresh off trading four starters while stockpiling as many first-round picks as possible — already have as many wins as I anticipated they would by Thanksgiving. Opening with a trio of wins over playoff teams qualifies as shocking. The Jazz are playing hard for rookie head coach Will Hardy. Lauri Markkanen is off to a spectacular start, and fellow young trade additions Collin Sexton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Walker Kessler have also flashed potential for a franchise still likely (and hopeful?) to finish in the lottery.

The Philadelphia 76ers have gotten off to a rocky start, going 0-3 through the first week of the 2022-23 season. John Geliebter-USA TODAY Sports

Andre Snellings: The 76ers starting the season 0-3, including a loss to the rebuilding Spurs, has been my biggest surprise. I expected James Harden to enter this season healthy and in shape and thus to play at a much higher level than he did last postseason. And the thing is… he has! But instead of Harden’s strong play in the backcourt meshing with Joel Embiid in a classic big/little pairing, thus far they have seemed to take turns pulling all the air out of the room. No synergy, no defense, just two guys who can each put up huge numbers if they’re featured.

Tim Bontemps: This one is easy: the 76ers’ 0-3 start. The Sixers have to be absolutely thrilled the Phillies have romped through the National League playoffs and the Eagles (6-0) are the NFL’s lone undefeated team, because little has gone right so far for the pro basketball team in Philly. The Sixers rank 24th in the league in both offensive and defensive efficiency; they expected to contend for top five in both categories, not bottom five. Obviously, there’s plenty of time for things to turn around, but let’s just say the 76ers had better beat Indiana at home Monday or else this is going to get really ugly, really fast.

The Lakers’ opening week was ____.

MacMahon: Amusing. C’mon, how could you not chuckle when Russell Westbrook blamed a one-game preseason stint as a reserve for a hamstring issue that suddenly healed when he was reinserted in the starting lineup? It’s amazing that Westbrook, who blamed sitting in the fourth quarter for a brief bout with “back tightness” last season, has survived so many halftimes. LeBron James accurately pointed out the Lakers’ shooting woes without taking any accountability for pushing for the Westbrook trade that was the biggest factor in the poor roster fit.

Pelton: Predictable. The flaws in this Lakers’ roster were evident to anyone paying attention, particularly during a 1-5 preseason. Nobody outside perhaps the Lakers’ front office was surprised to see their poor outside shooting emerge as a fatal flaw. The question is whether the Lakers are a Westbrook trade away from contending, and the answer so far is a firm no.

Collier: Sad. The NBA is in a great place with so many good, talented and interesting teams, but this isn’t one of them. I’m not sure James is going to be a good enough reason to stay up late watching West Coast games for this team.

ESPN’s countdown of the league’s best players returns for its 12th season. See which stars made the cut, which vaulted to the top and which are sliding down the list.

o NBArank 1-5: International stars on the riseo NBArank 6-10: How far LeBron and KD fello NBArank 11-25: L.A. duo and rising Wolveso NBArank 26-100: Russ, Ben and a host of Qso Debate! LeBron’s ranking and top-10 tweaks

Bontemps: Predictable. This team just isn’t very good. Yes, James is arguably the greatest player, but he’s approaching his 38th birthday in December. Anthony Davis has missed large chunks of three out of the past four seasons. Westbrook continues to be a train wreck of a fit next to James. And the roster is filled with one bad 3-point shooter after another. This is a team that was expected, by rational observers, to be fighting for a spot in the back half of the play-in mix. Nothing that happened this week changed that viewpoint.

Snellings: Foreseeable. They made several moves this offseason to improve their defense, and Davis’ move to center (finally!) is a feather in new coach Darvin Ham’s hat. But the team knew it didn’t do nearly enough to improve shooting. Thus, events such as the starting backcourt going a combined 1-for-18 from the field in Game 2, or a combined 3-for-20 from 3-point range in the first two games, were inevitable.

The Nets’ opening week was ____.

MacMahon: A roller coaster. The Nets followed up a terrible performance against the New Orleans Pelicans with a quality win against the Toronto Raptors. The biggest difference was that Kyrie Irving scored 30 against Toronto after an awful opener. He’s not exactly dependable, but Brooklyn’s ceiling remains high because Kevin Durant and Irving are such spectacular offensive talents.

Snellings: A warning. The Nets need to improve their interior defense if they want to contend. The Nets have gotten full games from their All-Star trio of Durant, Irving and Ben Simmons, and they are clearly learning to play together. But the team got dominated in the interior in Game 1, with the Pelicans’ big front line of Zion Williamson, Brandon Ingram and Jonas Valanciunas combining for 68 points (52% FG) and 29 rebounds to spark a 22-point blowout. The Nets came back to win Game 2 against the undersized Raptors, but even Toronto’s small-ball front line of Pascal Siakam, Scottie Barnes and O.G. Anunoby combined for 64 points (57% FG) and 24 rebounds.

Create or join an ESPN Fantasy Basketball league today and draft your league any time before the first game tips off every Monday. Your league starts fresh with 0-0 records for the new matchup period.

Sign up for free!

Bontemps: Predictable. Hard to say a lot off two games, but will use “predictable” here, too. Brooklyn looked better against the Raptors in its second game, another team that doesn’t have the kind of interior masher to give them trouble. Let’s see what happens this week, when the Nets face the Grizzlies, Milwaukee Bucks and Dallas Mavericks. The results of those games will give us a much better sense of what this team will actually be.

Pelton: Fine. The opening loss to the Pelicans was ugly, and Brooklyn is likely to be mired near the bottom of the defensive rating rankings all season, but beating the Raptors was impressive and the Nets will surely shoot better than they have so far (34% on 3s, including a combined 10-of-34 for Durant and Irving). There’s no reason to panic and no indication anyone has, yet.

Collier: Intriguing. It’s going to be fascinating to watch this team each night, so sign me up for the ride. Durant and Irving are thrilling superstars to watch. Simmons looks like he’s going to be up and down. The talent is there even if the roster is a bit ill-fitting. I still have no idea where this team is headed.

Who has been the most impactful offseason addition through the first week?

Pelton: Donovan Mitchell. With apologies to the Atlanta Hawks’ Dejounte Murray, whose solid start has come against weaker opposition, Mitchell has played at a top-10 level thus far. In Mitchell’s first three games in Cleveland, he has averaged 33.3 points and 7.0 assists while making 53% of his 2-point attempts and 42% of his 3s. Mitchell lifted the Cavaliers to a pair of wins without injured All-Star teammate Darius Garland.

Christian Wood has 50 points in 49 minutes through two games for the Dallas Mavericks, pairing well with star Luka Doncic. Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

MacMahon: How about early Sixth Man of the Year front-runner Christian Wood? He’s the first player in Dallas history to score at least 25 points in his first two games. He’s scoring at better than a point-per-minute pace (50 points in 49 minutes). He also said the word “fun” five times in a three-minute media session Saturday after the blowout win against the Grizzlies.

Bontemps: I could pick Jalen Brunson, who has 15 assists and no turnovers through two games with the New York Knicks, or one of the many terrific rookies in this year’s class, but I’ll instead go with Wood, who has 50 points in 49 minutes through two games for Dallas. While Wood, quite understandably, would like to start, things are going to work out just fine for the pending free agent if he keeps performing like this regardless of whether he starts or comes off the bench.

Collier: Mitchell. An eye injury to Garland means we haven’t really seen the Cavs at their full potential yet, but a pair of 30-point games to kick off his Cleveland career has been a good reminder of how dynamic an offensive player Mitchell can be. He looks like a seamless fit on this roster.

Snellings: The addition of Murray to the Hawks’ backcourt makes them legitimate contenders in the Eastern Conference, and we saw some of that in Week 1. Murray pairs with Trae Young to give the Hawks arguably the most dynamic backcourt in the league. Everyone notices the offense, and Murray averaged 20 points and 10 assists last week to help highlight that. But Murray entered the league as an athletic, defensive specialist and he brings that dimension to the Hawks’ perimeter defense. When he’s in the starting lineup with Clint Capela and De’Andre Hunter, suddenly the Hawks also sport one of the league’s better defensive units.

What’s one opening-week matchup you’d love to see in the playoffs?

MacMahon: I’d sign up for seven more games of Mavs vs. Suns. I might have gone with Sixers-Celtics or Sixers-Bucks, but Philadelphia should probably win a game first before we start discussing potential playoff matchups.

Snellings: I started to say Bucks vs Sixers, because there’s always the chance that Giannis and Embiid will go into video-game mode when they see each other and combine for 92 points and 31 rebounds in a given game. Instead, let’s go bigger picture and say Warriors and Lakers. If they meet in the playoffs, it’ll be an indication the Lakers have gotten their act together, likely made trade(s) that better balance their roster, and that LeBron and Davis have stayed healthy enough to get the team there.

Donovan Mitchell proved early to be immediately impactful to his new team, the Cleveland Cavaliers. Through two games, Mitchell is averaging a career-high 31.5 points. Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press via AP

Bontemps: Having watched the game last week in person, a Cavs-Raptors series would be awfully fun. Two teams with lots of talent and vastly different play styles — with Cleveland featuring two little guards next to twin towers, and Toronto basically rolling out a team full of 6-foot-8 guys — would make for a really fun matchup in the postseason. Here’s hoping we get to see it.

Collier: Sixers-Bucks. Their game Thursday night was an ugly, good ol’ fashioned Eastern Conference throwback with a 90-88 final score. Embiid and Giannis Antetokounmpo need to go at each other for a playoff matchup at their peak.

Pelton: Denver NuggetsGolden State Warriors. We saw this in the opening round last spring, but with a very different version of the Nuggets than the one that won at Chase Center on Friday night. Healthy again, Michael Porter Jr. made five 3s and scored 17 points. Newcomers Bruce Brown Jr. and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope combined for 37 points and Denver did it without Jamal Murray, who is back after missing all of the 2021-22 season. Let’s run this back with Denver at full strength.

Read More

NBA first week surprises: the good (the Jazz!), the bad (the 76ers) and the ugly (sorry, Lakers fans)on October 24, 2022 at 12:55 pm Read More »

Blackhawks being careful in search for jersey advertisement patch sponsor

Nine NHL teams have advertisement patches on their jerseys — taking advantage of a new league policy this season — but the Blackhawks do not.

Considering the history and significance of their sweater, the Hawks are taking their time with their search for a jersey ad partner, business president Jaime Faulkner said last week.

“We want to find a partner with whom we share the same values [and] brand principles,” Faulkner said. “We’re having conversations with many organizations, but we want to be thoughtful and careful about who we put on this jersey. Thankfully, financially, we don’t need to rush into throwing a patch on there.”

The Canadiens and Maple Leafs are the two Original Six franchises that have added ad patches. The Leafs’ jersey has “Milk” beneath the right shoulder, representing the team’s new partnership with Dairy Farmers of Ontario. The Canadiens’ jersey features an RBC (Royal Bank of Canada) logo.

The Penguins, Capitals, Blues, Wild, Blue Jackets, Golden Knights and Coyotes also added patches.

Critics of the NHL’s new jersey-patch policy argue it could be a slippery slope, potentially opening the door for one ad to turn into multiple down the road. Some major European pro hockey leagues allow teams to sell seemingly endless jersey ads, which creates some distracting and hideous sweaters.

But a single ad patch doesn’t seem too noticeable, and the additional revenue could help the NHL start increasing its salary cap again sooner.

The Hawks are taking advantage of the NHL’s helmet ad policy that began in 2020-21, with Belle Tire’s logo adorning their domes for a third consecutive season.

Diversity numbers

A diversity study released by the NHL last week found that 83.6% of employees across the NHL and its teams are white (compared to 4.2% Asian, 3.7% Black and 3.7% Hispanic/Latino) and that 61.9% identify as male.

Hawks CEO Danny Wirtz said the numbers for the Hawks’ employee base roughly align with those league averages.

“We’ve come a long way in the last two years, both in terms of the diversity component but also in terms of building a culture that’s inclusive, equitable and [just],” Wirtz said. “While our numbers are what they are . . . what I’m really proud of is, when you walk around the office here, you see representation in almost every department.

“By all means, we have to continue to explore bringing in diverse candidates. We need to find top talent, and top talent is not limited to white males. Top talent takes us across all dimensions of diversity, including other things like [people with experience] outside of sports.”

Mrazek on IR

The Hawks put Petr Mrazek (groin strain) on injured reserve Sunday retroactive to Friday, meaning he’ll be out until at least this Friday and miss at least two more games. Alex Stalock was competent against the Kraken, saving 30 of 34 shots, including a big glove save in the final two minutes to preserve the lead.

Faceoff dominance

The Hawks won 41 of 59 faceoffs, continuing their dominance in the circles.

They rank second in the league with a 58.2% draw winning percentage, trailing only Patrice Bergeron’s Bruins. Jonathan Toews has won 60.8% of his 74 faceoffs, but newcomer Max Domi has been even better, winning 65.4% of his 81 faceoffs.

Read More

Blackhawks being careful in search for jersey advertisement patch sponsor Read More »

Chicago Bulls are looking to get back on track vs Boston CelticsVincent Pariseon October 24, 2022 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Bulls earned a huge opening night win over the Maimi Heat last week. It was a great way to open the season against an elite team and it was made even better by getting the huge win on the road. It also came without Zach LaVine which is very impressive.

However, the Bulls have since gotten LaVine back but nothing good to show for it. They have lost two since that first game and are now 1-2 on the year. They are looking to play much better than they did in their home opener against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Saturday night.

They were absolutely destroyed on their home court by a final score of 128-96. It really wasn’t even close. Every top player on the team had an underwhelming night based on their standards. It is a tough game knowing what happened in the final seconds of the one prior. Now, it is time to bounce back.

It is another home game on Monday night when the Bulls take on the Boston Celtics. This is a Celtics team that just lost in the NBA Finals to the Golden State Warriors so you know that they are very good. There is no doubt that this is going to be a struggle.

The Chicago Bulls need a good showing against the Boston Celtics on Monday.

Everyone thought that would be the case against the Miami Heat as well. The Bulls stunned them without their top player. Now, with him back, they should be able to put up a good performance in this one. They will have to give it everything they can but after the last game, there is no excuse.

Of course, it won’t be the end of the season if they drop it and go 1-3 but they shouldn’t want to do that. Things can go off the rails quickly when it comes to a team getting on a losing streak. It is going to be a struggle of a year but they can win some games.

They aren’t going to be the best team in the NBA through Christmas so there isn’t going to be as much wiggle room for error in the second half. This game against Boston is a great way to bounce back after two tough losses over the weekend. It would be nice to earn some momentum.

Read More

Chicago Bulls are looking to get back on track vs Boston CelticsVincent Pariseon October 24, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Paolo Banchero’s basketball dreams and the Seattle gym where it all startedon October 24, 2022 at 12:00 pm

PAOLO BANCHERO TWISTS his 6-foot-10 frame into a kids’ chair surrounded by atilt Lego towers. “Don’t Touch” signs adorn computer desks, child-scrawled warnings amid a makeshift cityscape of plastic.

It’s hardly a scene where you’d expect to see the $50.16 million-deal-wielding budding star of the Orlando Magic. Banchero isn’t rocking the viral purple suit he wore when he became the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft in June. Wearing a loose black hoodie and sweats that disguise his strength, today the 19-year-old is dressed more like he was a half-dozen years ago, when this building was practically home.

“I get nostalgic coming back to this place, walking through,” he says, looking over his shoulder and into the homework room at the Rotary Boys and Girls Club. “I spent a lot of time here.”

Banchero grew up in Seattle, minutes away from Rotary, a cinderblock beacon for a Central District neighborhood that has been bent, warped, shattered and rebuilt by change. Back in the 1970s, the Black Panthers served free meals here on weekends. When Sir Mix-A-Lot was rising from Seattle obscurity to household stardom, he put on concerts in the gym. The city’s basketball talent had always found their way to Rotary’s aging hardwood, but few found nationwide success beyond it. For the past three decades, two local coaches have been working to change that, turning Rotary’s neighborhood talent pool into one of the most successful AAU programs in the country and creating a community springboard to the game’s highest peaks. Now Banchero is poised to be Rotary Style’s biggest success story to date.

“This is the place I started playing basketball,” says Banchero, a McDonald’s All-American, last year’s ACC Rookie of the Year at Duke and the odds-on favorite for the 2022-23 NBA Rookie of the Year, particularly after he became the first player since LeBron James to have at least 25 points, five rebounds and five assists in his NBA debut last week.

His left leg bears a tattoo of his Rotary jersey, the same No. 5 he’s worn at every stop since. His right biceps features the cross streets of 19th and Spruce. It’s the same address where he sits today, heeding a siren call to the program that catalyzed his journey to Duke and now Orlando.

“This place means as much to me as anything can mean to someone,” Banchero says, stretching out his legs before leaning in.

“They could wipe my memory and I wouldn’t forget Rotary.”

Finkley and Hennings watched in the ’80s and ’90s as Seattle’s best basketball talent topped out at high school or community college. “The playground was as far as we could see,” Finkley says. Victoria Will for ESPN

IT’S 1994, AND SEVEN men sit in Dan Finkley’s Central District apartment, flipping through a packet Finkley had distributed — a plan for an AAU basketball program complete with community obligations and mentorship projects. They’re handheld versions of a dream he could no longer keep to himself.

The men pore over his pages. Some shake their heads. Scoffs sweep across his living room. Finkley, a distribution manager at Pepsi, thinks his dream is DOA. Then Daryll Hennings, a young paralegal, raises his hand.

Years earlier, Finkley and Hennings had formed a friendship through basketball — playing in community centers and on outdoor courts. Eventually, they both took up coaching through Seattle’s Central Area Youth Association (CAYA) and watched a local middle schooler named Jason Terry, who would go on to become a high school champion, NCAA champion and NBA champion, outplay one of the best youth teams in the nation in a Reno YMCA. Terry was reiterated proof their city had NBA-caliber players; what it lacked was its own platform.

“They could wipe my memory and I wouldn’t forget Rotary.”
Paolo Banchero

For years, Finkley and Hennings had looked on helplessly as neighborhood stars — high school champions from Terry’s Franklin, from Garfield, from Rainier Beach — were passed over by college scouts who barely gave a second glance to players from the city’s minority-heavy urban center.

“Garfield would win state every year, Franklin and Rainier Beach won a bunch, all the city schools were winning,” Hennings says. “After school [these players would] end up at community college or back on the streets. That was a tough pill to swallow.”

For Central District kids in the ’80s and ’90s, church leagues and pickup games funneled toward the bright lights of high school and city bragging rights. High school blue bloods like Garfield, Rainier Beach, Franklin, O’Dea — some would argue — carried as much clout as the city’s SuperSonics. Sonics legends like Gary Payton and Donald Earl “Slick” Watts sardined themselves into tiny gyms just to watch.

Those gyms were often prospects’ pinnacles, at once on a pedestal and stuck in place.

“The playground was as far as we could see,” Finkley says.

Finkley, a product of Seattle’s busing era, had dropped out of organized basketball by the time he was a sophomore in high school. Victoria Will for ESPN

Finkley himself had been a lanky forward who grew up less than a mile from Rotary in the late ’70s. He went to high school during Seattle’s busing era, and though he lived just a few blocks from Garfield, he got hauled across town to predominantly white Lincoln High. The busing era (in 2002, dubbed by late historian Cassandra Tate, a “well-intentioned failure”) was designed to desegregate Seattle schools but, per Finkley, stripped minority students of their support systems when they needed them most.

Where Finkley says he and his contemporaries felt most out of place? Home: the basketball court.

Finkley’s new high school coach insisted his dribbling pace and ball handling were “out of control.” By his sophomore year, he had quit high school basketball, giving up on further aspirations and leaning into streetball.

Years later, Finkley and Hennings watched local prospects — like Quin Snyder from Mercer Island, a wealthy Seattle suburb — feature at Duke and other major college programs. But aside from the occasional breakthrough — like Rainier Beach’s Doug Christie, who starred at Pepperdine before becoming a four-time NBA All-Defensive team honoree — rarely did national powerhouses come knocking for Seattle’s urban talent pool.

“A bunch of kids just as good, or better, [never] got a chance,” Hennings says.

In Finkley’s living room, the plan clicks into place. Finkley and Hennings decide their program, Seattle Style, would get the next generation to places theirs never did.

When Hennings, right, was a young paralegal, he’d sock away cash to cover lunch for Style kids who couldn’t afford it at tournaments. “I was just enjoying making a difference in kids’ lives where they weren’t out doing something crazy,” Hennings says. Victoria Will for ESPN

B-LEGIT’S NEW HIT “City 2 City” vibrates the tape deck as Hennings pops the passenger-side door of his black Volkswagen GTI.

Wiping the sleep from his eyes, Roydell Smiley Jr. piles into the back seat with Maurice Murphy, Ed Roy and Smiley’s cousin, Jimmie Haywood, just before 8 a.m. Still years from filling out their frames, the middle schoolers jigsaw-puzzle their gangly limbs into place as Hennings points his ride toward the next house. In all, he jams six middle schoolers — a starting five and one sub — into his two-door hatchback.

Some would come with lunch money, but Hennings made a habit of setting aside extra cash from his work at the firm to cover the rest. It was 1996, and he’d just gotten married and was saving to start a family of his own. But Hennings’ wife said coaching had changed him — turned him from a head-down hard worker to someone his community relied on. She urged him to keep showing up.

These weekend trips had become routine for the young coach. His mind wanders 90 miles north to the tournament in Bellingham, Washington, a world away from the Central District’s gridwork of corner stores and aging single-family homes. But that was exactly the point: Each trip is a chance for his players to step beyond city limits, to see where the game could lead.

It had been two years since Finkley and Hennings had set their plan in motion and started hosting drop-in workouts at Garfield Community Center. At first, it was just weekend drills with a few local kids, but well-placed flyers at elementary schools and word of mouth had done wonders.

Murphy was in seventh grade when he attended his first workout. Smiley and Haywood, future USC and Oregon State guards, respectively, were already playing, and Murphy saw a chance to be a part of something. In Hennings, just a few years out of high school, Murphy also saw someone who looked and dressed like him. Hennings knew what it meant to be young and Black in a rapidly gentrifying Seattle.

“Daryll is from here [and] grew up in the neighborhoods we came from,” Murphy says. “He could relate to us.”

With Finkley implementing the up-tempo, exciting brand of basketball that ostracized him in high school, the Style lived up to their name. Their breakneck pace turned heads, and soon, a cast of Central District and South Seattle standouts — including Tre Simmons, Roy and his younger brother, a skinny guard named Brandon — flocked.

In Hennings and Finkley, players saw an opportunity to elevate their basketball. But parents saw something bigger: a positive and trusted mentor for their kids.

“I was just enjoying making a difference in kids’ lives where they weren’t out doing something crazy,” Hennings says. “I was giving them something to do every Saturday and Sunday. There weren’t a lot of young, Black role models. It was kind of an anomaly.”

Even rarer were two coaches without any of their own kids on the team. AAU squads have notoriously been run by overbearing fathers with vested interests, but Hennings’ son Arell wouldn’t come through the program for years. The charge was always larger than family: They had a village to carry.

“It was us trying to take care of the ‘hood,” Hennings says. “We’re mentors, uncles, travel agents, counselors, parole officers …”

In 1996, with a solidified team led by Smiley and Haywood, the Style moved a 15-minute walk up the hill into the cinderblock hallows of Rotary Boys and Girls Club. Seattle Style became Rotary Style, and one team quickly morphed into a program. Finkley started focusing on the Style’s youth ranks, which, in addition to their boys’ teams, soon included an in-house, coed elementary school league and a fourth-to-eighth grade girls’ program (a current feeder for the Pacific Northwest’s lone girls’ EYBL program, Tree of Hope). Hennings became the athletic director of the entire Boys and Girls Club while assuming the Rotary Style’s head-coaching duties.

He led their first group of boys to the AAU Nationals in 1995, and they’d return in 1997, but even bigger things were to come.

Jamal Crawford greets MarJon Beauchamp last summer at The CrawsOver Pro-Am, an idea he traces to Rotary. Cassy Athena/Getty Images

BEFORE HE BECAME the pied piper of Seattle basketball, Jamal Crawford was a fifth-grader known for dribbling a suede ball in Rainier Vista Boys and Girls Club. Finkley remembers receiving a call about a kid who wouldn’t leave the gym and decided to see for himself.

“Skinny,” Finkley says, “but he had handles.”

The three-time NBA Sixth Man of the Year played under Finkley and Hennings at CAYA for a little over a season before moving to California. Despite being “the last man on the bench,” Crawford says they footed his travel bill when money was tight for his family.

When he returned to Seattle years later to play at Rainier Beach as a 6-5 point guard, he sought out Hennings.

“They had me when I was the worst guy on the team,” Crawford says. “It was only right that when I’m the best, I play for them again. I trusted them and how they looked out for me.”

Things were clicking for Hennings and Finkley. Shortly before Crawford’s return, legendary Sonics coach George Karl came knocking, looking to help bolster the upstart youth program with an equipment sponsorship and coaching support. Hennings and Finkley had the players, but as the newly formed Rotary’s Friends of Hoop, they now had the brand recognition of an NBA franchise.

After Crawford joined up in the spring of 1998, the new squad started putting the nation on notice.

That AAU season, Rotary battled future NBA talent like Carlos Boozer and Tyson Chandler. At tournaments, college coaches like Georgetown’s John Thompson and UNLV’s Jerry Tarkanian would be waiting to talk in hotel lobbies.

Karl split from Rotary Style the following year, starting his own area team, Friends of Hoop. It was an amicable parting, according to Finkley. The Rotary foundation was solidified: Crawford was off to the University of Michigan, and Murphy, Simmons, Haywood and Smiley would all play at Division I programs.

“To get a full ride while representing my home city … it meant so much to me,” Smiley says. “I knew we were on to something, but had no idea it could get as big as it is now.”

Outside of Terry, Crawford and Roy — four NBA Sixth Man Awards and a slew of All-Star Game appearances among them — first-round picks Terrence Williams, Marvin Williams, Tony Wroten Jr., Dejounte Murray, Aaron Brooks, Rodney Stuckey and Zach LaVine all came through Rotary. Peyton Siva, a second-rounder in 2013, did too.

In 2022, at least nine former Rotary players are currently on NBA rosters: Jaylen Nowell (Minnesota Timberwolves), Kevin Porter Jr. (Houston Rockets), Jalen and Jaden McDaniels (Charlotte Hornets, Timberwolves), 2022 All-Stars Murray (Atlanta Hawks) and LaVine (Chicago Bulls), and 2022 first-round picks MarJon Beauchamp (Milwaukee Bucks), Tari Eason (Houston Rockets) and Banchero.

In 1994, that was a pipe dream. Today, it’s the unabashed fulfillment of two men’s devotion to maintaining and fortifying their neighborhood — even as their beloved NBA franchise abandoned Seattle in 2008.

The irony was writ large: As their area churned out some of the best basketball talent in the country, the city they knew was shifting under their feet.

The cross signs of East Spruce Street and 19th Avenue — home of the Rotary Boys and Girls Club — are tattooed on Banchero’s inner right biceps in cursive. Victoria Will for ESPN

EARL LANCASTER SIDE-STEPS quietly to the drone of hair clippers. At 54 years old, his beard grayer and midline heavier than when he opened Earl’s Cuts and Styles in 1992, Lancaster’s well-manicured hands still move to a steady rhythm: precision over speed, the angles just right after three decades of lineups, trims and fades. In a steady procession, young men filter off the street and into his barber chair.

Payton, the SuperSonics’ second overall pick in 1990, was one of the first. After providing some of the startup cash needed to get the Central District shop off the ground, the future nine-time All-Star would get cleaned up between road trips, cracking jokes with local kids who showed up to catch a glimpse of the NBA star. Payton’s jersey used to hang on the wall. When some of those kids made it big, their jerseys joined The Glove’s — Terry, Roy, Crawford.

Now those jerseys sit in a closet. A flatscreen rests between the two mirrors and a mosaic portrait of Lancaster spans the back wall of his new shop, a local hub saved by a Seattle University community outreach grant. It almost wasn’t so. Lancaster looks up over his glasses, pointing a black comb toward his original spot on the opposite corner of 23rd and Union Street. Today a 428-unit apartment building sits in its place. The liquor store next door is gone. So too is Ms. Helen’s Soul Food and the families who lined up for her oxtail and fresh peach cobbler on summer evenings.

In the 1970s, more than 75% of Central District residents identified as Black, according to maps from the Civil Rights and Labor History Consortium at the University of Washington. Today, according to the Seattle Office of Planning and Community Development, that number is down to roughly 12.6%.

Young basketball players still file out of Rotary down the street and wander into the new Earl’s, seeking out familiarity in a jarring sea of change, a nod of confidence that’s not lost on Lancaster. He grew up attending summer camp at the Boys and Girls Club, and a smile dances across his lips when talking about the weekend parties that once turned the neighborhood out. When his two daughters were in school, they visited the club for homework help.

“It’s always been there,” he says, sweeping tufts of black hair into his dustbin. “For as long as you can remember.”

Lancaster has watched his neighborhood’s exodus — his family, his friends — from the front row.

“It was never just about basketball; it’s about improving the community and creating an ecosystem of excellence — on and off the court.”
Maurice Murphy

It’s hard to keep track of all the businesses that have left the Central District over the decades, but Lancaster can count on his hand the neighborhood pillars that have withstood the city’s destructive advance. Rotary is one of them. When that first Rotary Style team started raising money for jerseys in the mid-’90s, he was one of the first local business owners to chip in — a chance to give back to the institution he grew up with. Since its inception, the basketball program has relied on the community’s older generation to prop up its youngest, a relationship forged in car washes, raffles, letter-writing campaigns, local donations — anything to get their teams to scoutable tournaments.

“[Our teams] were on a toothpick thread, but we always got there,” Finkley says.

Before her son starred at Louisville, Peyton Siva’s mom raised money for team trips by working a second job at a Seattle Mariners concession stand. Former NFL wide receiver and Rotary alum Nate Burleson’s parents fundraised through hot dog cookouts in supermarket parking lots.

“A lot of parents didn’t have much but were willing to help with their time,” Hennings says.

From the chair next to Lancaster, barber and lifelong Central District resident Jasen Moore takes the sentiment further.

“Rotary made the dream visible for us,” he says.

His brother, Donnie Cheatham, a standout guard at Franklin High, played with Rotary in the late 2000s and dreamt of playing college basketball before losing his eyesight in a shooting. He still can’t bear to throw his Rotary jerseys away.

“They [showed] inner-city Seattle kids things a lot of us would never see around the United States,” Cheatham says. “That [this] little round ball is going to get you somewhere bigger than your own neighborhood.”

Kids in Central and South Seattle walk a tightrope between the court and the pressures off it, a reality Hennings and Finkley understand all too well. They watched crack cocaine ravage their community in the 1980s and gang violence derail some of the Central District’s most promising talent. Cheatham felt that firsthand, near the outdoor courts at Rainier Playfield after dark in 2008. In 2010, more than a year after Cheatham lost his sight, his high school teammate and top-100 national recruit, Jordan Daisy, was charged with murder after a reported drug deal gone wrong.

Hennings is still in touch with Daisy, knowing that someday he’ll be out of prison, looking for a second chance. He hopes to give him one.

“Great kids, great athletes … but they made a bad decision and walked down a different path,” he says.

Hennings and Finkley acknowledge that for every Crawford arc, there’s one like Cheatham or Daisy.

But they’ve also seen Rotary alumni use basketball to build a better life through the sport, not necessarily in it.

Maurice Murphy, now Dr. Murphy, for one: He captained Columbia’s basketball team, earned his doctorate from USC’s Marshall School of Business, and is now a tenure-track assistant professor of strategy and entrepreneurship at the University of Georgia. Murphy recruits Black and Latinx youth into the tech space. As an impressionable teenager, he remembers Hennings urging him to attend a more academically challenging high school in lieu of getting more playing time at a rival school. Hennings backed that up by giving Murphy additional minutes on the AAU circuit.

“He knew our dreams and pushed us to achieve them,” Murphy says. “It was never just about basketball; it’s about improving the community and creating an ecosystem of excellence — on and off the court.”

Over the years, Rotary Style have turned into a basketball pipeline for Central District kids to make it to college and the pros. Victoria Will for ESPN

ROYDELL SMILEY JR., still imposing years past his playing prime, steps into a Rainier Beach gym mere miles from where he played high school ball with Brandon Roy, the Naismith National Coach of the Year in 2017 with Garfield, and University of Washington associate head coach Will Conroy. He’s noticeably lighter on hardwood. His black sweats hang loose, and the Rotary logo he designed — complete with a Space Needle rising out of a Carolina blue basketball — is blazed across the chest of his hoodie.

“How’s it going, Coach?” The echo of dribbling stops as, one by one, jersey-clad teenagers pass by Smiley with a fist bump. The last player, a lanky guard, hangs out for a few words of wisdom from his old man. After a final dap, Legend Smiley heads back to the layup line.

Basketball showed Smiley — a former USC standout and the first in his talented family to play Division I ball — the world. It also brought him back. His father played at Garfield. Now Smiley’s son, Legend, does too. Legend’s head coach at Rotary? Finkley.

“To see [Legend] with the same coach, my first at Rotary, it means everything,” Smiley says.

He was in the first class of Rotary players to come back to coach, starting with his son’s elementary school teams before helping out with older kids. Last season he worked with the under-16s, and Finkley focused on Legend and the under-15 squad.

In many ways, this has become the program’s most valuable asset and gift: a self-sustaining ecosystem of talent — coaching and playing.

“[Roydell] is one of the truest examples of what it means to love your community,” says TraeAnna Holiday, a Central District-focused activist, filmmaker and media director at Washington-based nonprofit King County Equity Now. “When you’re intentional about connecting with young people in the area that raised you, it’s what real mentorship looks like.”

2 Related

There’s arguably no better example of that mentorship, or the entire Rotary experience, than Crawford.

While balancing an NBA schedule, Crawford brought fellow stars to his backyard, making Seattle basketball culture a mainstream affair. For more than a decade, he’s hosted The CrawsOver Pro-Am, a popular summer tourney that pits local high school, college and pro talent against names like LeBron and Kevin Durant. More importantly, it gives local youth a chance to see the sport’s biggest stars up close, free of charge.

Crawford credits the CrawsOver to the legacy of Rotary. In fact, he values what Hennings and Finkley have built so fervently that, when his own son started playing, he went home to the institution he knew best.

“There was only one coach I could have him play for, that I trusted with him: Daryll,” Crawford says. “I know what [Rotary] is about, what they stand for. No knocks to anyone else, but I lived it.”

Soon, Crawford wasn’t just dropping his son off at practice — he was coaching, joining a trove of high-level alumni who roam the Rotary sidelines: Roy, Simmons and Smiley have all coached youth teams; Tacoma-raised Isaiah Thomas runs sessions with elementary schoolers; Nate Robinson has been a regular at his son’s practices.

“Maybe they went to play somewhere else, but their baby is playing at Rotary,” says Joyce Walker, LSU’s all-time leading scorer and a three-time NCAA All-American who was the first women’s player at Rotary in the 1970s. “They’ll always find their way home.”

The coaches are there; the talent is too. With barely enough room to stand without stepping onto the court, youth Rotary players cram in, often rubbing shoulders with future NBA talent.

“The Brandon Roys, the Aaron Brookses, the Terrence Williamses. You’re right there with them,” Cheatham says. “You might be 5 or 6 and see the big guys practice right after your league game. Everybody is watching because that’s what they want to be.”

As scholarship competition becomes increasingly fierce, parents from as far away as Oregon send their kids to Rotary because of the program’s pedigree and pipeline. Still, Hennings and Finkley look for any opportunity to prop up talent at home.

“The seeds were deeply planted and the roots are still growing,” Smiley says.

Legend, a 6-5 sophomore shooting guard, born and raised in central Seattle, is testament to that; he just got offered a scholarship to the University of Washington. So too is small forward Jaylin Stewart, a rising 2023 ESPN 100 senior headed to UConn next year.

Finkley, now 57, and Hennings, 50, know they’ll have to hang it up someday, that the house they built won’t topple if they step away. For Hennings, though — especially with incessant rumors of an NBA franchise returning to Seattle — it’s still too early to call game.

“Paolo’s group was supposed to be my last. I had them all the way through [high school],” Hennings says. “Now I’ve got a seventh-grade team that might be my last.”

He chuckles, takes a look around, and a grin creeps across his lips.

“But I’ve got a couple of nephews that are pretty good, too.”

Banchero traces his love of basketball to Finkley, Hennings and Rotary Style. Here, Banchero dunks as Detroit Pistons center Jalen Duren watches on helplessly. Nic Antaya/Getty Images

PAOLO BANCHERO CUTS into the lane and catches the ball near the free throw line. He dribbles once, spins, makes contact with the Detroit Pistons’ Saddiq Bey and sinks the short jumper for the Orlando Magic’s first basket of the 2022-23 NBA season. It’s Banchero’s first basket as a pro.

Later, in the fourth quarter, he catches an outlet pass at halfcourt on a fast break, dribbles twice and soars over Cory Joseph for an emphatic dunk.

After the clock has ticked down the first 48 minutes of his NBA career, Banchero has contributed 27 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists and 2 blocks.

The cross streets of 19th and Spruce flex even bigger on the rookie’s biceps.

His mom, Rhonda, a former UW hoops star, had gone to high school with Hennings, opening the door for Paolo to be part of Finkley’s Central District dream. Paolo’s dad, Mario, played pickup games at the Rotary, and a young Paolo tagged along. Those Rotary roots took hold: Soon it’s where Paolo was going “four or five times a week” for summer camps, after-school activities and, of course, basketball.

As he puts it: “This is where I grew up.”

Read More

Paolo Banchero’s basketball dreams and the Seattle gym where it all startedon October 24, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Legendary coaches: Patriots’ Belichick, Bears’ Halas have much more in common than 324 winson October 24, 2022 at 12:16 pm

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Andy Reid is on the other end of the telephone, sharing thoughts on Bill Belichick. His perspective is one few can provide.

“We probably downplay how you have to operate as a head coach in this league, especially us older ones. We don’t talk much about it,” he says.

“To be able to digest all that and be as productive as he is, and have the relationships he has with the players, is a phenomenal thing. We’re lucky to have him in this league, doing what he’s doing at this present time. You never take that for granted as guys get older.”

Reid, the 64-year-old Kansas City Chiefs coach, has carved out time to acknowledge the magnitude of what his close friend Belichick, 70, is on the cusp of accomplishing.

If Belichick’s New England Patriots beat the Chicago Bears on Monday night (8:15 p.m. ET, ESPN), Belichick will move past legendary Bears coach George Halas into sole possession of second place on the NFL’s all-time head-coaching wins list (regular season and postseason combined).

Entering Monday night, it’s Miami Dolphins legend Don Shula on top at 347, then Halas and Belichick at 324.

BELICHICK AND HALAS might be tied in victories, but they have commonalities beyond the win column.

Belichick’s ties to Halas came through his father, Steve, the longtime college football coach who knew some of the assistants on Halas’ staff in the 1950s and 1960s. Steve Belichick had also coached quarterback Bill Wade at Vanderbilt before Wade went on to play for Halas’ Bears, helping lead them to the 1963 NFL championship.

The Belichicks were based in Annapolis, Maryland, so when the Bears visited the Baltimore Colts, further connections were made.

“We would go to the locker room after the game. They were always very gracious and generous, let me hang around and stuff like that,” Belichick recalled. “I have a ton of respect for Coach Halas and the McCaskey family and what he did for professional football.”

Russell Wilson and the Broncos take on Trevor Lawrence and the Jaguars across the pond at London’s iconic Wembley Stadium on Sunday, Oct 30, at 9:30 a.m. (ET) exclusively on ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and get access to live NFL games, highlights, originals, analysis and more all season long.

Halas’ eldest child, Virginia, married Edward McCaskey in 1943 and became principal owner of the Bears upon Halas’ death in 1983.

Reid, fifth all time in wins at 257, carries a lot of respect for Halas too.

“He was one of the forefathers. He helped set the pace for what we have today,” he said of Halas, the late player, coach, owner and Hall of Famer nicknamed “Papa Bear.”

“That’s the part I respect the most. He did it for so many years and had the energy to do it, still raising a family and doing all the things you need to do as a dad, coach, owner, general manager, president. And he played the game on top of that. I have the utmost respect for the things he did, and particularly the foundation he helped lay for all of us today.”

When Belichick shared his recollections of Halas following the Patriots’ 38-15 victory over the Browns last Sunday in Cleveland, given the location, he included former Browns and Bengals coach Paul Brown (15th in all-time wins).

“I probably shouldn’t make that list. They were my idols,” Belichick said.

“What [Halas] did for professional football, and Paul Brown and others like that who paved the way for us as coaches and paved the way for the National Football League to grow into what it is today, they laid a lot of the building blocks.”

Chicago Bears owner and coach George Halas is hoisted on the shoulders of players after beating Washington 73-0 to win the 1940 NFL Championship game. Chicago Tribune file photo/TNS via Getty Images

HALAS’ LEGACY WITH the Bears is still evident during each of their games. The left sleeve of the team’s uniform includes the initials “GSH” — for George Stanley Halas — a reflection of his status as founder of the franchise in 1920 when they were initially known as the Decatur Staleys.

In all, he won six NFL championships and coached the Bears for 40 seasons, although they weren’t consecutive. He stepped away three times: 1930-32, 1942-45 (to serve in the military during World War II) and 1956-57.

Ed Stone was the Bears beat reporter at the Chicago’s American — the afternoon newspaper of the Chicago Tribune — and covered the start of the 1963 season that delivered Halas’ final title.

“He was a very tough coach. He was very meticulous in everything he did in his preparation for the team,” Stone, now 89, told ESPN.

“He was not an outspoken man. At his personal appearances, he was often reluctant to speak. Our newspaper had a Bears event every so often, and he would usually send an assistant coach instead of himself. But he could be very different personally than he was as a coach; I would say he was a much nicer, gentler person off the field than he was on it.”

Sounds similar to the coach currently stalking the sideline in New England who, like Halas, has won six championships as a head coach.

“He’s got a great personality, which people don’t see,” Reid said of Belichick, who is in his 48th consecutive season coaching in the NFL. “Good sense of humor. Very witty. I think everyone knows he’s very intelligent, but he’s well-rounded in that area, it’s not just football.

“He does a tremendous amount for people, whether it’s ex-players or helping out with the different people he knows, giving them things they need in their profession to be successful. He’s a giving person that way. I love the guy for what he is.”

HERE’S ANOTHER STRIKING similarity: As coach of the Bears, Halas was fiercely protective of any information that could compromise competitive advantage — from injuries to transactions.

“Whenever there was a cutdown of personnel earlier in the season, when rosters had to be reduced, he was very secretive about that,” Stone said. “When you would ask him questions about it, he’d say, ‘That’s private information and you shouldn’t be doing anything that would interfere with the operation of the team.’

o What to know about Tua’s returno Fixing the Bears’ offenseo Do Bills need to make a move?o Surtain and Sauce lead the wayo Inside Kyle Pitts’ evolution

“He was very secretive about his practices, didn’t like anybody to know what they were planning.”

In his 23 seasons as Patriots coach, Belichick has often closely followed a Halas-type script. The Patriots are traditionally one of the last teams to announce the initial 53-man roster, not giving other clubs the information before it’s required. Ditto for the injury report and transactions such as elevating a practice-squad player to the game-day roster.

And as for Belichick’s news conferences, Halas would likely be proud, considering Stone’s recollections of what it was like covering the Bears.

“He was a very interesting guy with the press, in that he would be, in his mind, very cooperative. But the local writers understood they weren’t going to get much from him,” Stone said.

“When he would get out-of-town writers around him, I can remember them holding their pens above their pads of paper and not writing anything down because he wasn’t saying anything they could use. But he would occupy their time and entertain them for a period of time.”

“He does a tremendous amount for people,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid (right) said of Patriots coach Bill Belichick. “… giving them things they need in their profession to be successful. He’s a giving person that way. I love the guy for what he is.” Al Bello/Getty Images

ROSTER MANAGEMENT AND innovation proved to be a key to Belichick’s and Halas’ success, too.

Don Pierson started working at the Chicago Tribune in 1967, which was Halas’ final season as coach. Thus, his coverage of the Bears was mostly when Halas, who died in 1983, was focusing on his front-office and ownership duties. Through that experience and talking to Halas about his coaching career, Pierson sees a link between Halas and Belichick in terms of how their teams were run.

“Belichick is not the owner, he doesn’t have the title of general manager, but I’m sure pretty much what he says goes. Of course, Halas, that would be similar. Very autocratic,” he said, before sharing another connection in how they built their teams.

2 Related

“[Halas] was able to control his roster probably better than anyone else in the league at that time to find the players he wanted. He would trade away players to Pittsburgh — they’d be on loan — and a couple years later they’d be back. That sort of thing.

“The other thing that characterized his coaching is that he hired very good assistants and allowed them to coach. He hired the guy [Clark Shaughnessy] who practically invented the T formation with men in motion. So very innovative in that regard.”

Belichick’s innovation is well documented, with examples including a heavy emphasis on “situational football,” defensive spacing and positional versatility, among other things. As is his knack for building an annually competitive roster — usually with a strong middle class of players at midrange salaries — despite restrictions from a salary cap designed to create leaguewide parity.

Jerod Mayo played for Belichick from 2008 to 2014 and is in his fourth season serving as an assistant coach on his staff. Acknowledging that any coach needs good players to win games, Mayo highlighted why he believes Belichick is about to surpass Halas.

“One thing about Coach is his willingness to evolve,” he said. “His willingness to take advice from different people. It doesn’t matter where you are on the spectrum — young, old, Black, white. He takes all those things into consideration, and when you do that, you kind of minimize your blind spots. He has people around him who will tell him the truth.”

ON THE DAY he tied Halas on the all-time wins list, Belichick deflected credit to the players, from his days as a rising assistant coach with the New York Giants, beginning in 1979, to his first head-coaching job, with the Cleveland Browns (1991-95), to becoming the Patriots’ head coach in 2000. He also noted the work of assistant coaches on his staff.

By the following day, he was done addressing the milestone. When a radio host congratulated him and asked what it meant to him, Belichick said, “This game isn’t about me, it’s about our team. Time to move off that subject. We’ve talked enough about it.”

Reid, in his 31st consecutive season as an NFL coach, understands that mindset.

Pick NFL player props every week. Rack up more wins than Mike for the season and you could win $20K! Make Your Picks

Asked how much he senses the achievement means to Belichick, he said, “I don’t know that, because he doesn’t talk about that. You start counting numbers, coaches don’t do that, especially ones that have been around long enough to have NFL scar tissue. You just take the next one and go for it.

“People talk, you hear those things. So he probably thinks about it, but probably not for very long, and gets on with trying to get the next win, which is extremely hard in this league.”

Stone surmises that’s precisely how Halas would have approached his record. Halas had a sizable edge by the time he retired in 1967, his 324 wins well ahead of Green Bay Packers legend Curly Lambeau’s 229. Halas’ record was broken by Shula in 1993, with Dolphins players carrying him off the field and Shula saying, “It was very emotional, and at the same time, I’m glad it’s over.”

The record wasn’t a hot topic between reporters and Halas.

“I never discussed it with him, and I don’t know if he was that concerned about it. My feeling is that he was probably just concerned about the next game they played,” Stone said of Halas.

“That [record] wasn’t part of his ego.”

For Belichick this week, that means he’s “on to Chicago.”

But those who walk in his coaching shoes and admire his place among the game’s coaching legends are happy to recognize what he’s on the cusp of accomplishing.

“It’s an amazing number,” Reid said. “It’s so well deserved, for the effort he puts in. He’s a relentless worker. I can see how it’s been done because he’s a heck of a football coach.”

Read More

Legendary coaches: Patriots’ Belichick, Bears’ Halas have much more in common than 324 winson October 24, 2022 at 12:16 pm Read More »

NBA suspends Heat’s Martin, fines Raps’ Kolokoon October 24, 2022 at 3:00 am

MIAMI — Caleb Martin‘s scuffle with Christian Koloko will keep him out of the Toronto-Miami rematch Monday night.

Martin has been suspended for one game by the NBA, after the league determined he was the instigator in a scuffle with Koloko that spilled into the baseline seats near the Miami bench during a Raptors-Heat game Saturday night.

Also suspended: Heat rookie Nikola Jovic, who was found to have left the bench area during the incident. Koloko was fined $15,000 for grabbing Martin during the altercation.

The league handed down the penalties Sunday night. Martin and Jovic will miss Monday’s game. Both Martin and Koloko were whistled for technical fouls and ejected from Saturday’s matchup.

“Overall, I’ve got to be more professional in the way that I handle those type of situations,” Martin said Saturday night, after Miami held on for a 112-109 victory.

Jovic hasn’t even made his NBA regular-season debut yet. Martin will lose about $44,700 in salary for his suspension, Jovic about $15,500.

Martin fouled Koloko as the two jostled for position on a rebound early in the third quarter, with the Raptors rookie ending up on the ground. Martin walked toward him, Koloko bounced up quickly, tempers flared and Martin then drove Koloko backward into the seats — the ones taking the brunt of the impact not occupied by any fans at that time. There were some fans in nearby seats who had some contact with those involved in the scrum.

Koloko wasn’t sure why any of it happened.

“I was as confused as you,” Koloko said. “I have no idea. … I don’t even know him, so I don’t know what was going on through his head.”

Jovic was standing near the end of the Heat bench, not far from where Martin and Koloko were tangled, but was still found to have broken the NBA rule that all players not participating in the game must remain in the immediate vicinity of their bench during an altercation.

Security personnel from both teams rushed to the spot in an effort to break things up, as did almost all of the other players who were on the court at the time, at least two Heat assistants and Raptors coach Nick Nurse — whose bench was on the other end of the court.

“Christian will be fine,” Nurse said.

Read More

NBA suspends Heat’s Martin, fines Raps’ Kolokoon October 24, 2022 at 3:00 am Read More »

Chicago Bears fans react to Packers losing to Washington

The Packers have lost three-straight games as Bears fans react to the latest loss

Green Bay Packers fans are learning a little bit how it feels to be a Chicago Bears fan. After another loss on Sunday, this time to the Washington Commanders, the packers fell to 3-4 on the year.

And it’s safe to say that the offense is struggling big time in Green Bay.

The Packers look completely out of sync and the frustrations are starting to mount for Aaron Rodgers and the offense. And things don’t get much easier either as they have a road game at Buffalo next week. But for Bears fans, it was a good Sunday.

Not only do the Bears play on Monday, putting away some disappointment for another day, they got to gloat and celebrate a Packers loss. They did exactly that:

#Bears fans watching Packers Twitter explode because their offense is playing poorly pic.twitter.com/FgqJBo6wB2

— Jacob Infante (@jacobinfante24) October 23, 2022

Pay attention to GB, Bears fans. They’re losing terrible games when they’re still trying to compete. We’re losing close games in the first year of a rebuild.

Back away from the ledge, it could be worse. You could be a Packers fan pic.twitter.com/BrF2qpWu4M

— Pete, and you will have time for my shenanigans (@Pete_Chi_Fan) October 23, 2022

Cant be greedy. My Fantasy Team This Week Sucked. But the Packers Lost so I’m good 😂

— The Irish Bears Show (@IrishBearsShow) October 23, 2022

When it’s 80 degrees outside, the Bears can’t hurt you today, and the Packers lose. pic.twitter.com/dRiX11E0vX

— Ross Read (@RossRead) October 23, 2022

It’s October 23rd and the #Blackhawks have the same amount of wins as the Packers pic.twitter.com/0t2Wegs9sa

— Mario Tirabassi (@Mario_Tirabassi) October 23, 2022

Yes. It’s finally true.
Green Bay sucks.

They’re a shitty football team.
Like, REALLY bad.
And it’s only going to get worse.

Welcome to the club #Packers fans.

— Silvy (@WaddleandSilvy) October 23, 2022

Packer fans talked all that shit when we lost to the commanders only for them to lose to the commanders

— EJ (@itsmine49) October 23, 2022

Hey Packer fan, I told you we are going to watch 2023 NFL Draft breakdowns and then you can leave. pic.twitter.com/WU25v3weQm

— Max Markham (@MaxMarkhamNFL) October 23, 2022

At least the #Bears went into 2022 knowing they were probably going to be bad.

The Packers on the other hand…

— Erik Lambert (@ErikLambert1) October 23, 2022

 

 

Look, the Bears aren’t a very good team. That’s fine. Everyone can admit that. But seeing Green Bay struggle like this is something we haven’t seen in a long time.

Are the days of Green Bay dominating the division slowly coming to an end? Are the tables finally turning on them?

Let’s hope so!

Read More

Chicago Bears fans react to Packers losing to Washington Read More »